A road to love paved with cliches
Los Angeles Times
|September 22, 2025
Two strangers revisit old wounds via GPS in director Kogonada's try-hard romance.
MATT KENNEDY Sony Pictures
MARGOT ROBBIE and Colin Farrell in "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey."
"A Big Bold Beautiful Journey" is a surreal, color-saturated quest about healing childhood scars in order to have healthy adult relationships. It's a corny road trip.
Directed by the monomonikered Kogonada ("After Yang") from a script by Seth Reiss, this sputtering high-concept love story is about two singletons, Sarah (Margot Robbie) and David (Colin Farrell), who meet at a wedding and carpool home in a mystical rental sedan guided by a bossy GPS (voiced by Jodie Turner-Smith) that forces them to explore why she cheats and he swings from hot to cold. Their meandering, inevitable path to romance pit-stops at magical portals — actual doors standing alone on the shoulder — that transport them to each other's pivotal memories, say the hospital where Sarah’s mother died or the auditorium where a 15-year-old David first got his heart broken. It’s not time travel exactly; they can’t change their history. Consider it Waze-navigated regression therapy.
Who wouldn't be curious to see Ebenezer Scrooge take a Tinder date to meet his girlfriends past? It’s adorable to see Farrell relive starring in a high school class musical, leaping, twisting and grinning through the dorky choreography. I even liked the tidy coincidences that lead David to rent a 1994 Saturn from two pushy desk clerks (Kevin Kline and Phoebe Waller-Bridge) who seem to know more about him than they’re saying. As Waller-Bridge says in a testy German accent announcing the film’s theme, “Sometimes we have to perform to get to the truth." (Or in David's case, belt a few verses from "How to Succeed in Business Trying.")
This story is from the September 22, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Winter rains fall, and so do the records
Another major storm is forecast, bringing threats of more flooding and slides.
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
As billionaires, will the Beyoncés and the Taylor Swifts stand up to tyranny?
The reluctance of the 1% to protect democracy has left many of us feeling hopeless
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Back from the dead, a legacy paper adopts startup mindset
It’s a rare, hopeful reversal for Santa Barbara. New editor calls it 'greatest role.'
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Why Japandi Is the Style Everyone Wants in 2026
For 2026, interior design is shifting from pure aesthetics to emotional well-being.
1 min
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Parting words of wisdom from the legendary investor Buffett
The advice that legendary investor Warren Buffett offered on investing and life over the years helped earn him legions of followers who eagerly read his annual letters and filled an arena in Omaha every year to listen to him at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meetings.
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Grandmother, boy killed in Gaza tent fire
A grandmother and her 5-year-old grandson burned to death in Gaza when their tent caught fire, as thousands of Palestinians battle harrowing winter conditions in flimsy makeshift housing and the humanitarian crisis persists.
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
UCLA’s Chesney rounds out his coaching staff
Bob Chesney's initial UCLA football staff is going to have a familiar feel to anyone who follows James Madison.
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Faith leaders gird for year of tougher immigration issues
They offer support to anxious migrants who fear president’s wrath in their communities.
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
‘Stranger Things’ series finale pulls estimated $25 million at box office
The finale of Netflix’s blockbuster series “Stranger Things” gave movie theaters a much needed jolt, generating an estimated $20 to $25 million at the box office, according to multiple reports.
1 min
January 03, 2026
Los Angeles Times
What we get from newspapers
Re “As newspapers fade, a useful physical object disappears too,” Dec. 29
4 mins
January 03, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
